Vol. I — The Maker's Codex

Every bladeremembers thehands that made it.

A community for makers who grind, quench, and never stop learning.

Photo Essay

Featured Build — Nathaniel Ortega, Austin TX

From billet to blade:
a Sunday in the shop.

Nathaniel documents every build in a field notebook. Here, he shares the full arc — raw steel to finished handle — in his own words and photographs.

Raw high-carbon steel billet resting on a forge anvil, hammer marks visible on the surface
Stage 01 — Stock

The billet begins as 1084 high-carbon steel — 12 inches of potential, still holding the mill scale.

Glowing orange steel being drawn out on an anvil with a cross-peen hammer
Stage 02 — Forging

At 2,200°F the steel moves. Every hammer blow is a decision — thin the spine too fast and you've lost it.

Close-up of a belt grinder with sparks flying as a blade profile is ground
Stage 03 — Grinding

The grind is where time disappears. Plunge lines must be consistent; the bevel must be flat or convex — never hollow on a working knife.

A finished blade resting on dark leather, handle wrapped in natural cord, photographed in morning light
Stage 04 — Finished

Finished. Cord-wrapped handle, 58 HRC, full flat grind. The maker's mark is stamped twice — once for the record, once for the memory.

Steel — 1084 High Carbon

Hardness — 58–59 HRC · Heat Treat — Parks 50 quench

Maker — Nathaniel Ortega

Full thread →
Community

From the Forum Threads

Honest words
from the bench.

The best knowledge in Forge doesn't come from tutorials — it comes from the threads where makers argue, correct each other, and occasionally admit they were wrong.

Geometry#heat-treat
The geometry of the distal taper matters more than the grind angle. Most new makers obsess over the bevel and ignore what the spine is doing.

Marcus Bellamy

Journeyman · 4 years

47 replies

Technique#first-knives
I spent six months grinding files only before I touched a belt grinder. My hand skills are better for it. Don't rush the abrasives.

Priya Venkataraman

Hobbyist · 2 years

31 replies

Damascus#pattern-welding
Damascus isn't hard — it's just expensive to learn. Budget for 20 billets before you expect one worth finishing.

Dale Kowalczyk

Craft Show Seller · 9 years

89 replies

Sharpening#sharpening
Your edge geometry at 15 DPS will outlast a 20 DPS edge on the same steel every time. The math doesn't care about your feelings.

Yuki Tanaka

Intermediate · 3 years

62 replies

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